The climate-tech sector is working overtime to usher in solutions for averting
climate disaster. But for these projects to achieve their intended — and
arguably required — results in the face of a quickly-warming planet, bold
leadership is needed to pave and navigate the path toward success.
Leadership in this field takes on many forms. Not only do you need confidence at
the helm to create thriving teams that build effective products; there’s also
the need for climate tech to gain trust from society as leaders providing
viable, quickly scalable and highly impactful solutions to combat the climate
crisis.
In my role as Chief Information and Data Officer at seed design company
Inari, I am fortunate to be surrounded by numerous
examples of exceptional leadership. Together, we are tackling an incredibly
large challenge — developing seeds that will require much less land and natural
resources to help build a more sustainable global food system. But we are also
driven to do this as a team built on three essential elements: resilience,
trust, and collaboration and communication. Based on my personal experience —
including two decades at IBM Research and reinforced by my instructors at
Smith College’s Executive Education for Women program — I
fully believe these to be foundational to success in climate tech.
Resilience
The climate-tech community is pushing the boundaries of science and technology
to break new ground; and this type of discovery is by definition full of the
unknown. As with anything new, there will always be those who are reticent to
change. For widescale adoption, skepticism can be a challenging hurdle to
overcome. How do you react to the pointed questions, raised eyebrows and
flat-out “no”s?
In my experience, providing tangible evidence, context and direction is
incredibly powerful. What are the initiatives already in
action
that are providing solutions to the climate crisis? What are the long-term plans
that are being rolled out? What are others doing in the industry that is making
a difference?
In a space such as climate tech where a lot is yet to be invented, resilience
also means having an appetite to fail, learn and adjust course. After nearly two
decades at the intersection of research and industry, a key lesson is that as we
move forward, some steps will be sideways or even backward.
Illustrate hope and opportunity; and remind team members when ambitious goals
seem out of reach that one goes far by taking incremental steps along the way.
We should celebrate the near-term initiatives that get us closer to bolder goals
— making concrete advances that have the potential to combine for large-scale
change.
Trust
In my career building meaningful, impactful innovation, I have found that
building trust — both within my teams and through establishing trusted
partnerships — dramatically shortens the path to impact and increases the value
of what we can create together for our customers. Establishing trust is vital in
building strong teams equipped to think nimbly and rapidly to deploy
life-changing technologies.
For climate-tech leaders dealing with such complex systems, we cannot go it
alone. We earn trust through transparency and execution; and we give trust
to build effective partnerships that are a force multiplier. The individuals
coming into this field are investing their talent, education and experience into
the advancement of climate tech because they are mission-driven. They care
deeply about the impact of the project they’re building.
In building trust, communicate honestly and focus on creating value with your
team and with partners. What will be the impact of the project in the short and
long term? What are the metrics of success; and are you on track to reach those
benchmarks?
Collaboration and communication
Fighting the climate crisis requires the thought power of people from across
many industries — from biotech to
agriculture
to communications to data science and beyond. Collaboration is a must and needs
to be nurtured.
I have found that traditional reward and recognition structures often stand in
the way of effective cross-organizational collaboration; so, my advice is to
look carefully to ensure you are appropriately effectively cultivating
cross-organizational work. With so many experts with varying domain knowledge,
leaders should also focus on establishing strong communications across
disciplines. This will be time-consuming and perhaps painful at first; but being
impatient risks a lot of confusion.
For example, I’ve been in design meetings where everyone seemed to be on the
same page — only to discover afterward that we all walked away with utterly
different understandings, because our vocabularies were divergent. Words that
are core to the “lingua franca” of computing, biology and agriculture can have
wildly different meanings. (Say the word “vector” and the gene-editing
scientists in the room will think of a DNA molecule that acts as a vehicle,
while the software engineers will think of a particular data structure.)
Overcoming this type of language barrier takes time; but if you do it right, the
investment will pay off tenfold in the long run — with a cohesive team of
innovators that together can break the status quo and rethink ingrained notions.
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Rania Khalaf is Chief Information and Data Officer at Inari — a biotech company on a mission to transform agriculture and its impact on society and the environment.
Published Jan 13, 2023 7am EST / 4am PST / 12pm GMT / 1pm CET